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FDA Releases A Full List Of Affected Diabetes Drugs That Give Way To Flesh-Eating Infection

September 4, 2018

This article is from Do You Remember. Click the title to hop over there.

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Reports have recently surfaced that a popular diabetes medication may be causing a rare genital infection in some patients. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has officially warned both doctors and patients to be wary of the diabetes drugs they are using and their side effects, especially this one.

Three of the drugs that have been covered by the FDA warning include Invokana, Farxiga, and Jardiance to name a few. While the infection is rare, it is still considered life-threatening as it’s actually a flesh-eating infection. These type 2 diabetes drugs are designed to “lower blood sugar by causing the kidneys to remove sugar from the body through the urine,” according to The Kansas City Star.

The FDA stated that about 1.7 million patients in the U.S. were prescribed one of these drugs. This class of drugs (SGLT2) was approved in 2013, and since then, the FDA has identified 12 cases of Fournier’s gangrene in patients taking SGLT2. Every single person who encountered this infection was hospitalized and needed surgery. One of the patients did pass away.

So, what exactly is this flesh-eating genital infection? It’s known as Fournier’s gangrene or necrotising fascitis. It invades the genital area mostly in men, but can also affect women and children as well. The bacteria typically enters the body through a cut or break in the skin, and the infection then quickly spreads and destroys the tissue. Having diabetes alone is a risk factor already for developing Fournier’s gangrene. It is found in 1.6 out of 100,000 Americans every year, mostly men ages 50 to 79.

The FDA recommends that doctors and patients watch out for symptoms of this infection. These symptoms include tenderness, redness, swelling of the genitals or the area from the genitals back to the rectum, or have a fever above 100.4. The infection is fast-moving so it’s best to get immediate treatment at the first notice of feeling generally unwell.

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